Pages

Monday, June 6, 2011

Tutorial: Father's Day Grillin' Towel

Am I the only one who thinks that men are difficult to craft for? My husband likes a very simple style and a very limited color palette so this was quite the challenge for me! Not too bright, not too bold, not girly, not too embellished. Tailored and masculine.

This is an improved-upon idea from some grill towels I made for my husband last year....Last summer, my husband was deployed and missed our anniversary, Father's Day, and his birthday. So I just lumped all those occasions into one gift and surprised him with a new grill when he returned!! I made him grill towels to go with it, but they were pretty weak. I just added a grommet to a couple of kitchen towels and called it good.

But this year...I spruced up the Grillin' Towel to be a very styilsh, but manly gift to give.

Here's a sneak peek at the rest! Come back everyday this week and I will tell you how I made each one!

Now, on to the tutorial!

{Tutorial} : Father's Day Grillin' Towel
Gather your supplies:
****You will also need bobbin thread that is the same color as your towel. Otherwise you can see all your stitching on the back of the towel***

The iron-on patches are twill and I found them in the notions section of my local fabric store.

NOTE: Before you start, I would strongly suggest prewashing the towel and fabric. Both can have a tendency to shrink when washed. I like to get all the shrinking out of the way b-e-f-o-r-e I start the project!

1. Cut your fabric and bias tape to fit your towel. The fabric is folded in half widthwise...your band of fabric can be any size. I made mine ~4 inches wide. If you follow that, you need to cut it 8" x (towel width + a few inches). Then fold the fabric in half. Press. Sew together along long side. This will keep it stable. I actually serged mine (below).

2. Sew the bias tape to the fabric band as shown below.

3. Next, fold the bias tape down and press flat. Then press down 1/2"-1" on what will be the right end of the fabric band.

4. Pin the folded end to the towel. Start on the right side. I have found this is the easiest side to start with because of how I am moving the project through my sewing machine.

5. Here is how you will sew the band down. {Now, I suppose you don't have to do it this way, BUT from my experience (with other towel projects!) this will ensure that your band is sewn straight and even.}

Next, lay out your towel and iron the left raw edge under so that the fabric band will be even with the left edge of the towel. If it is too long, which mine was, cut it down. You just need about 1/2" to fold under. Pin in place. Now sew again...

Honestly, you could stop here if you wanted and skip the embellishments! You still have a nice-lookin' towel to give!

7. Attach the iron-on patches. Decide where you want to place your iron-on patches. Follow the directions on the package to iron them on. But realize, once you heat them up, they are stuck! So choose wisely and if you want them even, line them up the best you can. **Also, if you are doing a freezer paper stencil, then you have to iron the patches on first. I suppose if you have a vynil stencil (silhouette or cricut) then you could stencil at the very beginning to shorten your drying/waiting time.

Here is me trying to get them straight and even. I had just ONE shot to get it right!

For my paint, I just used a regular acrylic craft (black) mixed with a fabric medium (white). Just 'cause that's what I already had on hand.

9. Now you have to let this DRY. I waited overnight. {I know, right!?} When the paint is completely dry, edgestitch around each patch- just to be sure!

10. To add the grommet, fold the towel in half and mark a spot 1" from the edge. I used a 1" grommet, if you are using a larger one, you might need more space than 1" from the edge.

Install the grommet according to the package directions. You can buy a grommet kit (which includes everything you need) at a fabric store or a home improvement store. If you have never used a grommet I can offer two tips: 1--do this on concrete (garage, patio, etc.) and 2--"pound" don't tap!

And DONE!

Pretty nice, huh!?!?!

Funny thing is, our grill didn't have any hooks or bars on it. I actually added these. They are just drawer pulls from the home improvement store. I bought shorter screws because the screws that came with the knobs were too long (since I am just attaching them through a thin sheet of metal). I used my drill to make holes. And attached the drawer pulls. The L shaped ones are installed upside down. Our grill tools have leather strings on them and just loop right on the hooks.

Lastly, I bought these S hooks but a caribbeaner clip would also work.

~~~Now, come back tomorrow, and every day this week and I will show you 4 MORE towels that I made...all different...all manly...all easy!~~~

11 comments:

THis is fabulous!I would love it if you would post this to my linky party, 20 minute tuesdays, tomorrow!http://sweetfloweret.blogspot.comPeople LOVE quick and creative projects like this one ;)Thanks for considering.

Share this

LinkWithin

About Me

Hi there! I'm Kate- a wife and mom of three energetic kids! Thanks so much for stopping by my little blog- it is a thrill for me that you are even here! I love DIY, sewing, crafting. Craft Whatever is my spot to share any of these attempts with you! Don't forget to leave a comment so I can say hi back!

My Memories Coupon

Coupon Code: STMMMS53046

Permissions and Copyrights

I am sharing my work with you to use for PERSONAL use only. All images are copyrighted by Craft Whatever and may not be reproduced. You may utilize a single image if it is properly linked back and credited to this site. All tutorials are intended for personal use. Not for commercial use. Republishing a full tutorial without permission is not allowed. You may link to the site for the tutorial, properly crediting this site for any borrowed content.